ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1952. Following on from British Scientists of the Nineteenth Century, this volume covers six eminent British scientists whose work and personality have not receded into the same depth of perspective as their predecessors of the Nineteenth Century, but the tremendous changes following the two world wars have already cut them off sharply from this generation. Crowther concludes that these six scientists arose out of various phases of capitalist development and imperialism.

chapter |42 pages

Joseph John Thomson 1856–1940

chapter |50 pages

Ernest Rutherford 1871–1937

chapter |47 pages

James Hopwood Jeans 1877–1946

chapter |57 pages

Arthur Stanley Eddington 1882–1944

chapter |51 pages

Frederick Gowland Hopkins 1861–1947

chapter |63 pages

William Bateson 1861–1926